Elena Fajt "Punishment Without a Crime"

Gallery MC New York

poster for Elena Fajt "Punishment Without a Crime"

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"Punishment without a crime,” a critique of misogyny and social values, takes as its point of departure the concrete historical event that took place immediately after the liberation – the punishment of several tens of thousands of women by cutting their hair. These were women who socialized or flirted with the occupying soldiers, which was considered a sufficient reason for their public humiliation and punishment. Viewed in this light, hair-cutting appears as a form of social castration of women.

Taking photographic evidence as an aesthetic starting point and drawing on patriarchal violence against innocent women, the author problematizes and transcends historical traumas, cultural constraints and ideological controversies. Hair as a symbol of femininity is shifted from women’s bald heads to their bodies and dresses; the disgraced heads bear haircuts of “decent” women; their public exposure and shame are overlaid with cult fashion items dating from 1945 and later, filling metaphorically what was forcibly taken away from them. In “Punishment without a crime” all these unfortunate women have finally regained their hair, their dresses, their beauty and pride.

Media

Schedule

from November 15, 2010 to November 30, 2010

Artist(s)

Elena Fajt

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